@@apikki8247 minä en ole suomalainen. olen ruotsalainen, mutta tyttöystäväni on suomalainen, joten yritän oppia suomea ja oppia lisää suomalaisesta kulttuurista
Nah bro, I just give up changing my clothes at Mökki and straight have a "pyjama day" (aka I will be 2-6 days on a T-shirt/top and shorts and change my clothes ONLY if my mökki-neighbours asked me to come eat at their place, and only reason I accept, is A) free food and B) I'm polite.. )
After sauna it’s cool to put new clothes on but unless it’s drinking and chopping the wood or renew the walls or paint whatever it’s gonna be, it’s slightly more fine just to use clothes longer than average. Underwear and hands on the other hand, must be clean to begin with 😂. That’s my pov.
5 days means 6 sets of clothes, 1 for each day + 1 extra just in case... And the secret to utilizing this packing method is simply using the same clothes for the entire trip anyway!
exactly, you are literally just chilling or doing whatever *_'mökkitalkoot'_* you plan to do there, you are out in the middle of nowhere in the woods in privacy - *_nobody's gonna come there to judge you for wearing the same set of clothes for multiple days in a row_* - not to mention the whole concept of *_'mökkivaatteet'_* a.k.a. old and worn / old-timey / tacky clothes that are purposefully left at the summerhouse for one to wear there - we have a ton of mökkivaatteet at ours
I pack 2 shirts(in case of spillage), warm clothes and excessive amount of underwear just in case I trust a fart when I shouldn't. Haven't really happened to me but it did to a friend and I'd rather have it and don't need it instead of the otherway around.
i just usually rock naked but when you have to wear clothes, it's always the same ones 🤣🤣 one other thing i do is i wear the bathrobe or towel i hanged out in the evening in (while saunaing)
Few shirts are good for a whole month with me,no matter if I'm at the cabin or home. But I'm a very homey ordinary person when it comes to what I wear so..(shrug).